Fine Art Photography & Interactive Music Visuals

The photographs in this website are presented in a Gallery format. Most of them can be specially ordered as prints by contacting Elliott. Some of them are listed in our E shop. Because we wanted this to be primarily a photo experience, not a shopping experience, we did not clutter up the interface with purchase links.

ELLIOTT LANDY:

“I love photography. It has always been good to me. It has taken me to places I loved being, helped me to connect with many lovely and special people and allowed me to share with others some of my deepest experiences.

I was lucky. In the early days of my career I chose to photograph people and events that later came to be socially and culturally significant. But when I was photographing Jim Morrison in the Hunter College Auditorium, or Janis Joplin in the Anderson Theater on New York’s Lower East Side, neither event had, then or now, any meaning for me beyond my momentary love of the music they were creating and the way they looked creating it.

The thrill, the inspiration of the moment was all there was. To capture a flickering moment of joyous experience and share it with others — that was the reason I began photographing in the first place, and that is still the reason I take pictures today. I was never a fan.

For me, the joy of photography is the connection with what I am photographing and not the creation of an image with a computer. I try to do it in such a way that this joyous connection can be experienced by others who see my works. – Elliott Landy, 2018″

Best known for his classic “rock” photographs, Elliott Landy was one of the first “music photographers” to be recognized as an “artist.” His celebrated works include portraits of Bob Dylan (Nashville Skyline), The Band (Music From Big Pink, and The Band), Janis Joplin (Big Brother & The Holding Company: Cheap Thrills), Van Morrison (Moondance), Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison and many others. A photo journalist as well, his early images documented and supported the rising tide of anti-war sentiment and spiritual awakening throughout the United States during the late 1960’s.

Elliott’s iconic photographs of Dylan and The Band during the years they resided and recorded in the small arts colony of Woodstock, NY and his coverage of the 1969 Woodstock Festival, for which he was an official photographer have become synonymous with the town, the famed 1969 Music Festival and the Utopian spirit of the Woodstock Generation.

The ideals of both personal and social freedom are reflected in his later work of impressionist flowers (combining elements of impressionist painting with photography), kaleidoscopic imagery, and in the spiritual and artistic depth of several photo ​verité series of his family which lovingly capture the spontaneity of life and the wonder of love at any age.

Since 1967 Elliott’s work has been published and exhibited in galleries and museums worldwide. He has published nine books of his photography. His latest monograph, The Band Photographs, 1968-1969, published in 2016, was the highest funded photographic book in Kickstarter history.

Elliott has also creating a new App. LandyVision™ that lets the user blend still and moving imagery with music to create an interactive sound and visual experience that has never been seen before.